Pop Goes the Country?

Pop Goes the Country?
▪ 2001

      As the 21st century dawned, country music—fueled by the unprecedented crossover success of Garth Brooks, Shania Twain, LeAnn Rimes, Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, and the Dixie Chicks—remained more popular than ever. Still, industry-wide sales fell somewhat from the dizzying heights of the mid-1990s, and critics complained that Nashville's Music Row establishment had squandered country's soul. Rock riffs and rhythms and pop polish from a generation of performers more influenced by the Eagles than by Hank Williams left country traditionalist Randy Travis commenting, “We're supposed to be in the business of country music, so let's hear some.”

      The first time that country went pop was in the late 1950s when legendary guitarist-producer Chet Atkins attracted a wider audience with the “Nashville sound” by adding “sweetening” strings and vocal choruses to recordings by Eddy Arnold and Jim Reeves, among others. Billy Sherrill employed dense arrangements reminiscent of producer Phil Spector to create 1960s hits for Charlie Rich and Tammy Wynette; pop vocalists such as Olivia Newton-John and John Denver “went country” in the 1970s; and in the 1980s the crossover hits that capitalized on the popularity of the film sound track of Urban Cowboy became for many country purists the epitome of pop pandering.

      The stars' appearances as well as their masterful exploitation of music videos helped too to contribute to recent country crossover success as much, perhaps, as did musical mainstreaming. Cover girls Twain and Hill promoted cosmetics; the seductive Dixie Chicks (Natalie Maines, Martie Seidel, and Emily Robison) sported hip hairstyles and wardrobes; and Brooks, McGraw, and newcomer Brad Paisley were photogenic hunks.

      Beginning in the early 1990s, some of the most roots-oriented country music came not from Nashville but from alt.country (named for the Internet's role in its proliferation), a movement that combined the do-it-yourself aesthetics of alternative rock with the song forms, instrumentation, and vocals of traditional country. Steel guitars and fiddles were moved to the background in Nashville, but twang thrived in St. Louis, Mo., the stomping ground of the pioneering band Uncle Tupelo, whose Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy went on to form the influential groups Son Volt and Wilco, respectively. Nearby, in Festus, Mo., the Bottle Rockets were launched, and in Minneapolis, Minn., the Jayhawks took off, while Steve Earle made the journey from Texas to Nashville and then to prison before returning to the music scene. The independent label Bloodshot Records, founded in 1994, made Chicago the mecca for “insurgent country” artists such as Robbie Fulks, Freakwater (with the distinctive close harmonies of Janet Beveridge Bean and Catherine Ann Irwin), cowpunk godfather Alejandro Escovedo, and the Handsome Family (Brett and Rennie Sparks), whose modern Midwestern gothic tales borrowed from the Appalachian tradition. The scene's cornerstones were Tweedy and Welsh expatriate Jon Langford of the Waco Brothers, who long ago had led the erstwhile British punk band the Mekons toward honky-tonk. Meanwhile, back in Music City, BR5-49 and Lambchop produced Nashville sounds that subverted proven pop and traditional formulas.

Jeff Wallenfeldt

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Universalium. 2010.

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